Are you just lazy? Apart from not being up to date with common ecosystems (which I'd expect when doing anything web), look at the Getting Started:
Getting started
->Installing with Vite
->Installing with PostCSS
->Installing the CLI
->Upgrading from v3
At the bottom of the CLI paragraph it says "You can also download standalone builds of the new CLI tool from GitHub for projects that don’t otherwise depend on the Node.js ecosystem."
They just put the most common stuff at the top, because that's what most devs will use.
"In the United States, cocaine is regulated as a Schedule II drug under the Controlled Substances Act, meaning that it has a high potential for abuse but has an accepted medical use. While rarely used medically today, its accepted uses are as a topical local anesthetic for the upper respiratory tract as well as to reduce bleeding in the mouth, throat and nasal cavities.", from Wikipedias cocaine page. I remember septoplasty surgery using topical cocaine for example.
Why? Lead solder doesn't evaporate. The risk was always in recycling and maybe eating without having washed your hands. But you don't breathe in the solder, only the flux (which is even more toxic in lead-free solder applications).
> I wholeheartedly agree and support this notion and I sincerely hope it will be signed into law at once.
Why would you invert innocent until proven guilty for this particular matter but not others? And how exactly would the accused prove themselves innocent? Not having to prove an assault occured means that anyone could accuse anyone without reprimand.
EDIT: I agree that there's a problem in society and sometimes law regarding cases like in the other post, where the jury sees clear evidence and pretends like "it isn't rape because she had a short skirt" etc, this is obviously wrong. But for cases where it's testimony against testimony, the only realistic approach is to pressure the perp until they admit to it. I don't see how the opposite would be viable.
t-online told me I needed an imprint on the website that's reachable under my domain. Seems to be some misunderstanding of German law (German commercial websites need an imprint, legally, but t-online also apply this requirement to private domains).
It is more complicated than that. There are more criteria for when you need an imprint:
(1) any kind of journalistic content on your site
(2) any kind of financial gain from showing ads or making ads
(3) organizing any kind of group of people active on German territory
(4) running a business website
There might be more, but those are the ones I remember from reading the paragraphs a while ago.
And these are, of course, vague, which means that even something like "my favorite restaurants in Berlin" could be considered an ad, or any kind of comment on politics might be considered a form of journalism.
I dislike these rules, because they basically kill German blogging scene. Not so many people want to run a blog and have every idiot on the Internet know their personal address. And few bloggers want to rent a digital office or actual office, that will send mail to them (an indirection). The German law in this respect is terrible and working against a free Internet and against freedom of voicing your opinion. It works greatly in favor for tech giants, because people resort to putting their blogging on Facebook, Instagram and other disservices. It is very anti-decentralization.
Of course, if you run a business. But then you might even have an actual physical office address for work related stuff and not have a problem giving that to random strangers on the Internet. If you are a private person simply wanting to run a blog and talk about whatever you like, then it sucks. It does not have to be your home address you are sharing, but the other options will cost you money. And no, a postbox will not be sufficient, as decided in previous court cases. It must be a "ladungsfaehige" address. There are some businesses selling services to have a virtual office, with an actual address, which then send your mail further to your actual address and notify you via e-mail and all that. Whether those are really an acceptable option when it comes to the law is a bit unclear.
Wind farms often get turned off because there is too much Wind, solar is also often throttled. There is a lot of "lost" power that could rather find its way into batteries or H2-electrolyzers.
They get turned off to avoid damage in too much wind, not to avoid overproduction. We only have a few GW of installed solar capacity so it's not hugely important to the overall picture.
In the UK it's easy to see that Wind and CCGT plants operate in inverse of one another, when it's windy most of our power comes from the wind and the CCGT are switched off. And conversely when it's calm the CCGTs produce most of the power.
Wood-eating bacteria already exist and we use wood as a material for many things. It's not like such bacteria just spread from breath, like covid-viruses...
Look up shipworm, which historically took out many ships. Plenty of stuff eats wood quickly enough to cause issues. We have just evolved countermeasures. And trees are the product of a billion years of anti-predator evolution. Plastic is different than wood. It is homogenous and dead. Something like a plastic-eating bacteria might move through it exponentially.
There are plenty of old wooden houses still standing (even ones which predate modern plastic based paints), people still make boats out of wood too. I suspect similar things will happen with plastic, we'll learn to build and protect plastic in the way that we used to do with wood, and probably more stuff will be built out of stone.
Is this abysmal quality of figures and charts normal? I'd imagine the devices used for measuring allow exports of CSVs and thereby enable external generation of proper figures instead of these pixely-screenshot-type pictures...
Getting started ->Installing with Vite ->Installing with PostCSS ->Installing the CLI ->Upgrading from v3
At the bottom of the CLI paragraph it says "You can also download standalone builds of the new CLI tool from GitHub for projects that don’t otherwise depend on the Node.js ecosystem."
They just put the most common stuff at the top, because that's what most devs will use.